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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 108. Chapters: C++ Standard Library, C standard library, Ecma standards, ISO 9660, File Allocation Table, Ada, Universal Disk Format, ISO/IEC 8859, ANSI escape code, ANSI C, Standard Template Library, Standardization of Office Open XML, C Sharp, Near field communication, ISO/IEC 646, Linear Tape-Open, Office Open XML file formats, ECMAScript, Open XML Paper Specification, Vector, Allocator, ISO/IEC 2022, List, C++ Technical Report 1, Open Packaging Conventions, WiMedia Alliance, Holographic Versatile Disc, Universal Media Disc, Comparison of Office Open XML and OpenDocument, C++/CLI, Array, GNU C Library, Comparison of OpenXPS and PDF, Map, Digital Linear Tape, Strcpy, Utility, Advanced Intelligent Tape, String, Auto ptr, List of C functions, Strcat, Iostream, ECMAScript for XML, VXA, Sort, List of Ecma standards, Universal 3D, Unordered map, Klibc, End-of-file, UClibc, System, Return-to-libc attack, SC22, Tmpfile, Time t, Fstream, Strcmp, Embedded GLIBC, Strlen, Newlib, Ada Conformity Assessment Test Suite, Bionic, Hash map, Algorithm, Feof, Strstr, Dietlibc, Strncmp, Ifstream, Set, Bsearch, Qsort, Yellow Book, Strerror, ISO 13490, Ada Semantic Interface Specification, Crt0, Sstream. Excerpt: File Allocation Table (FAT) is a computer file system architecture now widely used on many computer systems and most memory cards, such as those used with digital cameras. FAT file systems are commonly found on floppy disks, flash memory cards, digital cameras, and many other portable devices because of their relative simplicity. FAT was also commonly used on hard disks throughout the DOS and Windows 9x eras, but its use on hard drives has declined since the introduction of Windows XP, which primarily uses the newer NTFS. The name originates from the usage of a table which centralizes the information about which areas belong to files, are f...